Church Girl

Album: yet to be titled (2026)
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Songfacts®:

  • "Church Girl" is Carly Pearce's anthem of acceptance and love for those who have faced criticism from the religious community regarding their life choices. She doesn't scold, doesn't excuse, and definitely doesn't slam the church door. Instead, it props it open and says, Come in. You're still welcome. Yes, you too.
  • The song speaks directly to women raised in church environments who learn early that there are rules, and that breaking them will be noticed. Pearce addresses the unspoken dress codes, the sideways glances, and the curious phenomenon whereby grace is preached enthusiastically but distributed sparingly.
  • Written by Cameron Bedell, Seth Ennis, and Carter Faith, "Church Girl" is notable in Pearce's catalog as an outside composition. "I was in my kitchen and it took my breath away when it got to the end of the chorus," she told Music Row magazine. "It's a bold song. I don't think it's by chance it's finding me now, and I don't think it's by chance that it's mine."
  • Pearce grew up in church in Kentucky and has held onto her Christian faith. However, various public experiences, including the breakdown of her marriage to fellow country singer Michael Ray, intensified her internal questioning: Had she failed God? Had she failed the church?

    "There's a lot of things that have happened in my life that maybe are not very pretty, none of us are perfect, and I've had to live that out in public," she told People. "And have felt as a Christian woman a lot of shame and guilt and judgment and confusion."
  • Pearce wondered if the failure of her marriage meant she's not a Christian and even that God hates her. "Church Girl" answers those questions not with doctrine, but with words of reassurance: You're okay. You're not going to Hell. "We're all figuring it out, and no matter where you're at on your journey, Jesus loves you," she said. "I know that.'"

    It's an echo of the grace-centered perspective found in songs like Brandon Heath's "Give Me Your Eyes" and Carrie Underwood's "Jesus, Take The Wheel," both focused less on spotless behavior than on admitting need and stumbling forward in faith.
  • Pearce is firm about the song's intention. "For me, it is not me saying, 'go get high and have sex, and be crazy' at all," she said. "But, it's me saying if your path to Jesus looks a little different, I think Jesus still loves you, and I think he would want more people to accept you for those parts of your story and the journey that you're on."
  • Carly Pearce co-produced the song with Ben West. A lineup of accomplished Nashville session musicians supports the track:

    Bryan Sutton: acoustic guitar and mandolin
    Nathan Dugger: electric guitar
    Josh Matheny: Dobro
    Jeneé Fleenor: fiddle
    Byron House: upright bass
    Dave Cohen: Wurlitzer and Hammond A100 organ
    Aaron Sterling: drums and percussion.

    The arrangement knows when to step forward and when to step aside, allowing Pearce's voice and the song's central act of welcome to do the real work.

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